-->

Introduction:


A series of essays wherein I explore the numerous musical identities of my favorite musician: from child prodigy to teen idol to guitar hero to singer/songwriter to award-winning in-demand film composer.
Featuring news/updates and commentary/analysis of Trevor's career and associated projects.
Comments are disabled but please feel free to contact me at rabinesque.blog@gmail.com.



Sunday, July 28, 2013

Knowing The Score: Zero Hour S1 E9: "Balance"

(Author's note: this essay contains spoilers for the ninth episode of Zero Hour, so don't say I didn't warn you!)

Further apologies, blah blah blah...but seriously, readers, I do apologize for having fallen behind in the recaps.   I'm trying to catch up as best I can now.  Part of my issue is with abc.com and their beta player, which is often non-cooperative at best.

Previously on: COUNTDOWN TO ARMAGEDDON, APPARENTLY.   Doppelgangers abound, faith is in short supply, and all Hank and Riley want out of this crazy world is some answers, y'all.

What I will stay about this episode is: it's a very transitional one, it's like you can hear the struts of the story's superstructure snapping into place in most of the scenes.  By this writing, having watched all the available episodes now, I believe Show definitely picks up momentum after this episode.

Eight is forever a line
without end
the worst sort of murder
is that of a friend.

So there are better murders, comparatively?  Okay...

In The Year of Der Fuehrer 1938, Sterm is holding a funeral for his friend on the not-yet-a-subsicle but puts a stop to the proceedings by reminding the crew they came to the Faroe Islands in the services of a Far HIgher Agenda, and yeah, he does talk in caps.  Fast forward and the Unholy Trinity of Hank, Laila and Riley are landing and discussing The Marble of Significance which of course assists them in their anvilicious dialog because everything has to do with belief, of course.

Flashback Time!  Riley and Molars are in the guise of their past selves: the happily married couple Theo and Becca, literally the night he is going to be extracted from his deep cover via plane explosion.   She's all girly and stuff and the entire scene is about reproduction, it's giving me a headache, that's how obvious it is.  Back to the present day, White Vincent is once more needling at his colleague: "Five years in the care of the Pyrates has done interesting stuff to you, Molars," and I gotta wonder just what the hell the two of them were doing before this whole ridiculous plot shifted into high gear and what event precipitated that and is WV just so angry that he can't deal with anyone, or is Molars a special case for his scorn?  WV gives hints that his beef with Hank is just part of a larger picture.

Hank's parents have a dither back at the homestead...and then when his dad rhetorically wonders where his lab rat offspring could possibly be, the scene shifts very convenient to the answer.  OH HAI FAROE ISLANDS! On the phone with Arron (who gets the best line of the ep: "You're not gonna believe this, but apparently we publish some sort of magazine?"  Oooh, snarky and meta, well-played Show!)  Hank wants to know the connection between his doppleganger and the Faroe Islands, so he asks them to get in touch with "your Nazi friend."  The Unholy Trinity splits up, and Hank and Laila take shelter.  Mommy Locust is in a clinic somewhere, receiving updates, and she is not pleased.  They give her a purposely hammy line which sort of ruins the progress made by the previous one: "Act like the end of the world is coming...because it just may be."

And...cue credit sequence!  That was nine minutes this time, a bit too long.

Meanwhile, Riley is thwarted again by the boss who hates her, and WV is attempting to ascertain where the ship needs to land in order to find their way to the burial site based on how the sub made its approach.

Flashback time!  The First Mate (I'm assuming) chronicles how Sterm deviated from the original plan, working out his penance, I guess.  Then we're back with Laila and her Catholic Valium: working the rosary.  She's freaked and has many FEELINGS!  Hank equivocates by saying there are "things beyond our comprehension" but admits he's smart enough to know he knows nothing, and just then his lab rat brother calls and bets him they'll end up at the burial site at the exact same time.  WV is the only one who knows how Sterm wronged Dietrich but he appears to be hell-bent (uh, sorry) on making Hank pay for it.  Apparently seeing Sterm frozen in the subsicle wasn't enough for him, WV assures Hank he will kill him this time.

Riley had ninja'ed her way onto the ship and finds Molars' security badge just hanging around (along with those of the rest of the crew).

Nazi Collector Extraordinaire drops by the Media Empire and there's a lot of blah blah blah is there something you're not telling me?  The main purpose of this scene - besides making him extremely creepy - is so the Cute Squad can discover there are two doppelgangers.

The boat is getting underway and Riley finds Molars, and he doesn't explain himself, just tells her he's not going with her.  Riley begins to possibly comprehend that she is closer to Hank than she'd like to be, and then Molars raises the alarm and it's been fun, baby, but you've got to go.  Gunfire, running, you know the drill.

Hank and Laila get their puzzle-fu on with the marble, and then race to the harbor to exposition with Riley: "The only thing I saw, was a different man where my husband used to be."  UH...YOU MEAN LIKE AN OPERATIVE?  LIKE, HANK ISN'T THE ONLY ONE WHOSE ENTIRE LIFE WAS A LIE?

Nazi Collector Extraordinaire is attempting to utilize the intimidation strategy of his forefathers, or whatever, but the Cute Squad just acts dumb, although Arron gets another good line: "Yeah you know as journalists, we're not so good with the showing."  They show him the door as he continues to prissily threaten them.  Like I said, dude is creepy.

While Riley cries in the shower, Hank and Laila have a numerology moment and she realizes that the design inside the marble is that of a Passion flower, the physical structure of which has been interpreted by Catholics to be wholly representative of their symbolism.  Arron informs him that history is literally repeating itself in that WV has a doppelganger as well.  While they're expositioning, Laila gets a call from Reggie (identified as "Omega" on her caller ID) and she sneaks out to call him back, thus giving him another chance to guilt her into carrying out the Shepherds' agenda.  Hank will receive the handy-dandy results of the Cute Squad's research, of course.  Laila fails to tell Hank about the call, but Riley emerges at a convenient point to deliver unto them some of Theo's plant-fu.  

And then it occurs to me: he's a geneticist!  I guess?  Probably?

Anyway, so she decides she's going to join their Rendezvous with Destiny and as she exits the room we can see Laila thinking, "Yeah thanks there, Third Wheel.  On the other hand you've got a gun, so..."

Meanwhile, Mommy Locust is in church with her pet Messenger Boy and one of her heavies comes to give her another status report.  After we endure her pious blathering for a couple minutes, she uses the Holy Water chalice like her personal fingerbowl and decides to pay a visit to the offices of Modern Skeptic.

Rachel gets a call from Hank's dad and she's being cagey, and he gets frustrated with her, leaving a cryptic message.  Back in the North Sea, WV and his crew figured out their anchorage as the Unholy Trinity make their way into the woods, and Riley conveniently informs her driver that the only Passion flower they're going to find is a chapel.  They have a guarded conversation about belief, and Riley gets in a good shot at Laila: "I know what I believe, I know my faith, I also know I have no business trying to sell it to anybody."  Just as she delivers this little salvo, a road sign comes loose in the wind and nearly decapitates Hank as it slices through the windshield.  Whoa. 

More Sign, Sign, Everywhere A Sign, as Arron just happens to pull up the latest weather radar which shows a perfect storm scenario happening in...you guessed it: the Faroe Islands.  Rachel is all, "Dude, let's bail," and Mommy Locust slithers in and begins acting all villian-y with her pious blatherings.  Hank's dad shows up and has a reunion with the boss' daughter and decides to offer his services once more.

In The Year of Der Fuehrer 1938, Sterm and his cannon fodder are on their crazy mission to bury the box as in the present day WV and Molars follow in their (muddy) footsteps.  WV is clearly being delusional, thinking Hank is Sterm.  Meanwhile the Unholy Trinity makes it to the deserted chapel and begins looking around as Laila suffers daddy issues looking at a stained glass image of Our Lord Jesus Christ (And he's got short hair?  Guess the Danes don't like a shaggy savior.).  She freaks out again, arguing with Hank, who has to state the obvious: "What happened out there on the road, that was a sign: a literal sign, made of metal, torn off by the wind."

WV and Molars find a rock in the ground at the coordinates inscribed C. Fidelis...uh, like Sterm would have time to carve something in the middle of that storm?  Clearly WV's research is lacking.  But they decide it is indeed The Place.  Back at the chapel, Hank and Riley are Multer-and-Scullying and Hank realizes that the same colors in the Marble of Significance are shining down upon a statue of Our Lord...who is missing an eye.

A storm is coming, birds are freaking, the Pyrates team finds a box in the ground.

So instead of taking the plank out of his own eye, Hank puts the Marble of Significance into Jesus' eye and answers that age-old question Do you see what I see?  The Marble of Significance is part of a kaleidoscope which when appropriately placed allows the one who looks through it to see the marker where the Holy Plot Device is buried.  Okay that was a cool puzzle, Show, I gotta tell ya.

People are digging...WV makes a comment about permafrost, Molars thinking that may be the reason why the Holy Plot Device was buried there...neither side has to dig for long...but we are shown the Pyrates discovery first, and it is not the True Cross, but the True Heart.  Sterm writes a touching eulogy for Dietrich, placing it in the pocket of the uniform clothing the perfectly preserved body.  WV is, understandably, freaking out at the sight of his doppelganger...that's gotta fuck with your head, am I right?  

Wind is whipping, birds are flocking, Hank and Riley open the box to find...frozen beetles!  And of course the Pyrates crash their party, so I guess WV wins the bet.  Hank declares Game Over and Molars is all, "Uh no, gimme the bugs."  He points a gun at them and Riley looks like someone kicked her puppy.

The good (scoring) stuff: there are some lovely cues in this episode, like the one used during Riley's shower scene.  I also liked the one during Laila's phone call, the way it built very gently to the dramatic swell before the cut to commercial.  Same with the scene where Dietrich's grave is discovered and the True Cross is uncovered.  There's something in the church scene which reminds me of another score, but I'm not sure which one.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

More confirmation!

Courtesy of a tweet yesterday from Scoring Sessions - the site which has provided coverage of more than a few of Trevor's score recording sessions (and I have a link to their archive in the "Neato Stuff" section on the front page) - it appears Trevor has at least reached the spotting stage in this project.

Hopefully this means they'll post photos from the session at some point in the future, although it's been a while since we've been allowed to see the Maestro at work in this capacity.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Knowing The Score: Zero Hour S1 E8: "Winding"

(Author's note: this essay contains spoilers for the eighth episode of Zero Hour, so don't say I didn't warn you!)

My apologies to readers for the further delay; further work commitments for the month happened along (i.e. my gig writing descriptions for an artisan fragrance company) and I had to put off both the recap and the interview transcription, and then type my brains out to get both done within a tight deadline, but I digress, so let's get on it now...

Previously on: COUNTDOWN TO ARMAGEDDON, APPARENTLY.
Those crazy kids Hank and Laila are going off on a quixotic quest to destroy the True Cross so Hank doesn't to have don the sad wings of destiny as the human detonation device of the Apocalypse, or whatever.  Meanwhile, White Vincent is trying his best to be a good little errand boy for Mommy Locust and find it before his freaky-ass eyeball'ed lab rat brother does.  And other stuff.

Tick-tock...WV delivers what I consider the most anvilicious rhyme yet about how he and Hank really are lab-rat brothers because...well, we'll save it for the scenes in question.

We're back at the beginning, where the main theme and the hokey dialogue inform us this is Zero Hour! and the pesky Rosicrucians must save the world from the evil religious artifact-hoarding Nazis and one doppelganger with a bad accent is talking to another whose accent is not so bad...but, like, we can't figure out who that is?  Really?  I mean, you don't even really try to make it suspenseful, Show, and if you're not gonna even try to work with me in this relationship, I just don't know if we can move forward...

(Oh wait, that's right, ABC filed for divorce.  Moving on.)

To eternity...AND BEYOND!  (Whoops sorry.)

Hank and Laila arrive in Strasbourg and they argue epistemology at the airport, and agree to go off with the first random taxi driver they encounter (which violates a sacred tourist rule).

The Feds are chasing their tales and Riley's boss snarks, "Since you're not doing your job and all, maybe you'd like to explain how this chick has five thousand aliases?"

Reggie puts out an execution order on Hank and Laila: I WANT THEM DEAD, AND I WANT BODY PARTS TO BE DELIVERED UNTO ME ONCE THEY ARE DEAD as we see Assassin Guy in yet another invocation of Cape Fear (Show, what is up with that?).

The Cute Squad is worried and expositioning and of course The Feds bust in and make all the other employees (Really? You're still trying to convince us this magazine isn't just a front for, say, lab rats waiting for their progremming to kick in and end the world?) go home.

Somewhere in the North Sea, WV is briefing Mommy Locust on the status of the mission and she brings in a former colleague, Molars, WV looks like a cat which has been given a new mouse to gnaw on.  
It's always a map!

Hank and Laila come face-to-face with The Mother of All Clocks at the cathedral while Laila attempts to invoke a variant of Godwin's Law, apparently.

Assassin Guy rolls up on the taxi driver and when the guy demands payment for his surveillance, AG basically tells him, without a word, I will pay you...WITH DEATH!

And...cue title sequence!  That was about the same amount of time as last week but it felt longer, I think, because of all the cross-cutting.

Back at the media empire Arron and Paige are weirdly flirting in their geeky way while Riley leans on Rachel to give her the hookup, guilting her into assistance (since she can't shoot anybody with her boss in the next room and all).

Meanwhile at Clock Central, Hank and Laila exposition, random docent, exposition, and surprise!  Assassin Guy appears and Laila is all OMG OMG OMG FREEZE IT'S THE T2000.  As is his wont, he causes a bit of mayhem.
Apocalypse Tourism, yeah it could catch on.

Somewhere in the North Sea, WV and Molars are enacting the dance of long-standing frenemies.  WV speaks cryptically of tea, dreams and death...until Molars says "Remember the mission, dude?"  There's a weird sort of homoerotic tension between them...just sayin.'

Back in WWII, Dietrich writes long philosophical tracts in his journal, much like any pesky Rosicrucian.  Sterm then joins him and they blather for a while.  It's difficult to keep track from one flashback to another.

Laila gets exposition-y about Golem, who as I noted bears a certain resemblance to the T2000 in his robotic intensity, and yet somehow they escape because reasons.  They then argue about what do with the Holy Plot Device, and of course the Skeptical Schlub is all for Blinding It With Science.  He calls Riley who whines, "You ditched me!" and then Laila breaks in and is all, "Chill Fedster, let's work this shit out, aiight?!"

We are led to believe that Riley's boss may be the dirty one in the organization, and let's face it: the guy looks pretty shady either way, in that bureaucratic toad kind of way.

More philosophical meanderings with WV and Molars and...flashback! as the doppelgangers blah-blah-blah in the presence of the Holy Plot Device.  Sterm reassures Dietrich that The Plan will go on and that Jesus is in a piece of wood?  Yeah see, the memory of my catechism is not that strong, apparently.

Reggie is going on about how the Shepherds and their Terminator are BAMFs who will hunt those infidels down!

Somehow, Hank and Laila manage to stay alive long enough to have Riley, Agent Blonde, and the Cute Squad show up with the clocks, and then she gets all protective of the Skeptical Schlub and the Cute Squad, threatening to kill Laila if she lies again...yeah whatever.  Laila reveals what we already knew about Theo being aligned with the Pyrates.  Laila was meant to waylay Theo but Car Crash of Destiny and all.  More WHY?ing.

The Scoobies are puzzling out what to do next, and of course Arron has a pop culture geek plan which can't miss!  They go forth to their daring plan, the Feds keeping watch as Laila spy-fus her way into the catacombs, because obviously every major city has them.  As they're creeping through the tunnels, Laila is trying to build a contrite bridge and Arron's all, "Um sorry, you're a Lying Liar Who Lies."

Somewhere in the North Sea, WV is reading The Diary of a Doppelganger and...cue flashback!

Sterm and Dietrich have a pissing match and Dietrich wants to change course, and so okay, I'm assuming this is how subsicle, and Dietrich keeps harping on putting the Holy Plot Device in the mud, and I'm all, "Dude, it's in a box fer chrissakes!"  Sterm shoots Dietrich so that The Plan may prevail, which allows for Dietrich to have an epic death scene talking about the sweet fraternity in Heaven where I imagine there's beer and roofies and...oh wait, yeah not that kind of fraternity party, sorry.
The Brothers in Fate, whatever that means.

The Scoobies ninja their way into the cathedral and set about unlocking The Mother of All Clocks with Bible passages and Rachel and Arron have a tender moment and...er mah gah Show, can we please not have this unrequited romantic bullshit?  Please?!  Outside, Paige is not picking up because...Golem is unrelentlngly making his way to them.  Riley tries to get into the crime scene and even her multilingual rankpulling has no effect on the French, they're all vous parlez a la main; I mean really, she should have totally known that wasn't gonna work.

Laila, meanwhile, proclaims JESUS SAYS YOU SHOULD FORGIVE ME, HANK.  And what's Hank gonna do, she's a Hot Girl With Clock-fu, yanno?  So all the clues are entered and the Mother of All Clocks finally spits out the last piece of the puzzle and then...curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal, Agent Blonde!  She does this thing with her eyebrows like betcha didn't see that coming, didya?!  Show, dude, whatevs, I haz an underwhelmed.  I'd seriously think this was parody but there's no laugh track.

Riley sums up the next sequence by stating "And there's our mole," but only after Paige gets all fanatical-like.  Gunplay, running, and Golem cleans up the mess...Agent Blonde, we hardly knew ye.

More flirting between WV and Molars...I get that's there meant to be a creepy tension and all but these scenes just seem so painfully slow compared to the pacing of the rest of the ep.

Laila conveniently finds the map (because it's always a map), Riley has footage of WV, Hank sends the Cute Squad home, and Riley freaks out because...DUN DUN DUN, her martyr'ed husband is not so senselessly dead.

That's gotta fuck with your head, am I right?

The good (scoring) stuff: there are a lot of Action Movie! and Unbearable Tension! cues in this episode and that's not a bad thing, because that's why Trevor gets the big bucks to be the Go-To Action Guy.

(And if anyone can email me and tell me what the easter egg reference is in this recap I will praise you in the next recap as a person of cleverness and taste.  You're welcome.)

Sunday, July 7, 2013

update

For all those who have been following along with my episode recaps of Zero Hour for Knowing The Score, I will be a few days late with my recap of "Winding" this week as I am in the midst of transcribing an interview I conducted for another site, so the snark will be on hold till mid-week probably.  But thanks to everyone who does read with (hopeful) enjoyment. :)

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

new scoring project for Trevor

About a month ago or so in a conversation over at Yesfans I predicted that Trevor might score at least one film this year in light of Zero Hour being cancelled and therefore not having any other work commitments of that nature.  And it appears I might be right after all, as today the website Film Music Reporter has posted that Trevor will be scoring the next Peter Segal movie, Grudge Match, which is described as a "sports comedy."  Trevor had previously worked with Segal on the reboot of Get Smart.  I look forward to Trevor returning to comedy (although his music usually serves as the straight man) and of course sports-themed films are a specialty of his, given how well he composes what I call "human highlight reel music."

The story can be read here:
http://filmmusicreporter.com/2013/07/02/trevor-rabin-to-score-grudge-match/

Hopefully this information is accurate; either way I will relate further details as they become available.